Kentucky’s fourth constitution is the current constitution of the state. The official report of the records and debates of the convention is a valuable resource for lawyers, judges, and historians seeking to discern the intentions of the framers of...

University of Louisville. School of Law; University of Louisville--Students; University of Louisville--Alumni and alumnae; University of Louisville--Faculty; University of Louisville--Employees; Law students; Law & legal affairs; Law and...

The Louisville Lawyer (1955-1974) was the first of three official University of Louisville School of Law student publications. This is the second of two issues numbered as Volume 16, Number 2.

Leather-bound guest book dating from 2011 to the present, featuring signatures of attendees of Louisville Orchestra premieres; Grawemeyer Composition winners; and official guests of the School of Music.

University of Louisville. School of Law; University of Louisville--Students; University of Louisville--Alumni and alumnae; University of Louisville--Faculty; University of Louisville--Employees; Law students; Law & legal affairs; Law and...

The Louisville Lawyer (1955-1974) was the first of three official University of Louisville School of Law student publications. This is the first of two issues numbered as Volume 16, Number 2. The issue is dated Spring 1971 on the front page, but...

"Marcel Duchamp submitted [to the 1913 New York Armory Show] Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2, which was the most scandalous work of all. It was a humorous attack on Futurist proscriptions against traditional, Academic nudity. The image has a...

Kentucky’s fourth constitution is the current constitution of the state. The official report of the records and debates of the convention is a valuable resource for lawyers, judges, and historians seeking to discern the intentions of the framers of...

Littell's Statute Law of Kentucky, published from 1809-1819, has the first critically edited compilation of Kentucky statutes. It has long been recognized by lawyers as one of the founding documents of state law and by historians of early Kentucky...

University of Louisville. School of Law; University of Louisville--Students; University of Louisville--Alumni and alumnae; University of Louisville--Faculty; University of Louisville--Employees; Law students; Law & legal affairs; Law and...

The Louisville Lawyer (1955-1974) was the first of three official University of Louisville School of Law student publications. This issue is misnumbered as Volume 5, Number 2.

Kentucky’s fourth constitution is the current constitution of the state. The official report of the records and debates of the convention is a valuable resource for lawyers, judges, and historians seeking to discern the intentions of the framers of...

Oral history interview with Louisville physician Maurice Rabb. Dr. Rabb discusses his early life and education in Mississippi. He speaks of his experiences as a student at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee, comparing race relations in his...

Kentucky’s fourth constitution is the current constitution of the state. The official report of the records and debates of the convention is a valuable resource for lawyers, judges, and historians seeking to discern the intentions of the framers of...

Oral history interview conducted with legislator Mae Street Kidd on October 10, November 11, and December 5, 1978 by Ken Chumbley. Ms. Kidd discusses her life, including her childhood growing up in Bourbon County. Kidd attended the Lincoln...

Address: 800 Logan Street, Louisville, Kentucky. The Frank Fehr Cold Storage Co. offices are shown in the shorter brick building to the left. This three-story building includes an inscription of 1889 near the top and plate glass windows on the...

Sketch of champion harness racer Prince Wilkes, with the horse racing and pulling a jockey in a sulky, or two-wheeled cart. "D. W. Smith, 1887" is written in the left corner, and "2.14 3/4" and "Prince Wilkes" in the right corner. Apparently 2:14...

Port side view of ED.J. HOWARD, under construction, tied to the bank of the Ohio River at Howard Shipyard. The Howards converted the CHICKAMAUGA (Way T0411), a stern wheel towboat with a steel hull they bought from U.S. Engineers, into the ED.J....